Nils Weng, Hossein Nadali Najafabadi, Maria Westerholm
{"title":"破坏诱导的合成丙酸和醋酸氧化的变化:絮凝,细胞接近,和微生物活性","authors":"Nils Weng, Hossein Nadali Najafabadi, Maria Westerholm","doi":"10.1186/s13068-025-02644-3","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><h3>Background</h3><p>Syntrophic propionate- and acetate-oxidising bacteria (SPOB and SAOB) play a crucial role in biogas production, particularly under high ammonia conditions that are common in anaerobic degradation of protein-rich waste streams. These bacteria rely on close interactions with hydrogenotrophic methanogens to facilitate interspecies electron transfer and maintain thermodynamic feasibility. However, the impact of mixing-induced disruption of these essential syntrophic interactions in biogas systems remains largely unexplored. This study investigates how magnetic stirring and orbital shaking influence degradation dynamics, microbial community composition, and gene expression in syntrophic enrichment communities under high-ammonia conditions.</p><h3>Results</h3><p>Stirring significantly delayed the initiation of propionate degradation in one culture and completely inhibited it in the other two parallel cultures, whereas acetate degradation was less affected. Computational fluid dynamics modelling revealed that stirring generated higher shear rates (~ 20 s<sup>−1</sup>) and uniform cell distribution, while shaking led to lower shear rates and cell accumulation at the bottom of the culture bottle. Visual observations confirmed that stirring inhibited floc formation, while shaking promoted larger flocs compared to the static control condition, which formed smaller flocs and a sheet-like biofilm. Microbial community analysis identified substrate type and degradation progress as primary drivers of community structure, with motion displaying minimal influence. However, metatranscriptomic analysis revealed that motion-induced gene downregulation was associated with motility, surface sensing, and biofilm formation in SAOB and another bacterial species expressing genes for the glycine synthase reductase pathway. Stirring also suppressed oxalate–formate antiporter expression in SPOB, suggesting its dependence on spatial proximity for this energy-conserving mechanism. The strongest gene expression changes of stirring were observed in methanogens, indicating a coupling of the first and last steps of hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis, likely an adaptive strategy for efficient energy conservation. Other downregulated genes included ferrous iron transporters and electron transfer-associated enzymes.</p><h3>Conclusions</h3><p>This study highlights that stirring critically disrupts the initial syntrophic connection between SPOB and methanogens, whereas SAOB communities exhibit greater tolerance to shear stress and disruptive conditions that inhibits aggregate formation. These findings emphasize the importance of carefully managing mixing regimes, especially when attempting to reactivate ammonia-tolerant syntrophic propionate degraders in biogas systems experiencing rapid propionate accumulation under high-ammonia conditions.</p><h3>Graphical abstract</h3>\n<div><figure><div><div><picture><source><img></source></picture></div></div></figure></div></div>","PeriodicalId":494,"journal":{"name":"Biotechnology for Biofuels","volume":"18 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":6.1000,"publicationDate":"2025-04-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://biotechnologyforbiofuels.biomedcentral.com/counter/pdf/10.1186/s13068-025-02644-3","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Disruption-induced changes in syntrophic propionate and acetate oxidation: flocculation, cell proximity, and microbial activity\",\"authors\":\"Nils Weng, Hossein Nadali Najafabadi, Maria Westerholm\",\"doi\":\"10.1186/s13068-025-02644-3\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div><h3>Background</h3><p>Syntrophic propionate- and acetate-oxidising bacteria (SPOB and SAOB) play a crucial role in biogas production, particularly under high ammonia conditions that are common in anaerobic degradation of protein-rich waste streams. These bacteria rely on close interactions with hydrogenotrophic methanogens to facilitate interspecies electron transfer and maintain thermodynamic feasibility. However, the impact of mixing-induced disruption of these essential syntrophic interactions in biogas systems remains largely unexplored. This study investigates how magnetic stirring and orbital shaking influence degradation dynamics, microbial community composition, and gene expression in syntrophic enrichment communities under high-ammonia conditions.</p><h3>Results</h3><p>Stirring significantly delayed the initiation of propionate degradation in one culture and completely inhibited it in the other two parallel cultures, whereas acetate degradation was less affected. Computational fluid dynamics modelling revealed that stirring generated higher shear rates (~ 20 s<sup>−1</sup>) and uniform cell distribution, while shaking led to lower shear rates and cell accumulation at the bottom of the culture bottle. Visual observations confirmed that stirring inhibited floc formation, while shaking promoted larger flocs compared to the static control condition, which formed smaller flocs and a sheet-like biofilm. Microbial community analysis identified substrate type and degradation progress as primary drivers of community structure, with motion displaying minimal influence. However, metatranscriptomic analysis revealed that motion-induced gene downregulation was associated with motility, surface sensing, and biofilm formation in SAOB and another bacterial species expressing genes for the glycine synthase reductase pathway. Stirring also suppressed oxalate–formate antiporter expression in SPOB, suggesting its dependence on spatial proximity for this energy-conserving mechanism. The strongest gene expression changes of stirring were observed in methanogens, indicating a coupling of the first and last steps of hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis, likely an adaptive strategy for efficient energy conservation. Other downregulated genes included ferrous iron transporters and electron transfer-associated enzymes.</p><h3>Conclusions</h3><p>This study highlights that stirring critically disrupts the initial syntrophic connection between SPOB and methanogens, whereas SAOB communities exhibit greater tolerance to shear stress and disruptive conditions that inhibits aggregate formation. 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Disruption-induced changes in syntrophic propionate and acetate oxidation: flocculation, cell proximity, and microbial activity
Background
Syntrophic propionate- and acetate-oxidising bacteria (SPOB and SAOB) play a crucial role in biogas production, particularly under high ammonia conditions that are common in anaerobic degradation of protein-rich waste streams. These bacteria rely on close interactions with hydrogenotrophic methanogens to facilitate interspecies electron transfer and maintain thermodynamic feasibility. However, the impact of mixing-induced disruption of these essential syntrophic interactions in biogas systems remains largely unexplored. This study investigates how magnetic stirring and orbital shaking influence degradation dynamics, microbial community composition, and gene expression in syntrophic enrichment communities under high-ammonia conditions.
Results
Stirring significantly delayed the initiation of propionate degradation in one culture and completely inhibited it in the other two parallel cultures, whereas acetate degradation was less affected. Computational fluid dynamics modelling revealed that stirring generated higher shear rates (~ 20 s−1) and uniform cell distribution, while shaking led to lower shear rates and cell accumulation at the bottom of the culture bottle. Visual observations confirmed that stirring inhibited floc formation, while shaking promoted larger flocs compared to the static control condition, which formed smaller flocs and a sheet-like biofilm. Microbial community analysis identified substrate type and degradation progress as primary drivers of community structure, with motion displaying minimal influence. However, metatranscriptomic analysis revealed that motion-induced gene downregulation was associated with motility, surface sensing, and biofilm formation in SAOB and another bacterial species expressing genes for the glycine synthase reductase pathway. Stirring also suppressed oxalate–formate antiporter expression in SPOB, suggesting its dependence on spatial proximity for this energy-conserving mechanism. The strongest gene expression changes of stirring were observed in methanogens, indicating a coupling of the first and last steps of hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis, likely an adaptive strategy for efficient energy conservation. Other downregulated genes included ferrous iron transporters and electron transfer-associated enzymes.
Conclusions
This study highlights that stirring critically disrupts the initial syntrophic connection between SPOB and methanogens, whereas SAOB communities exhibit greater tolerance to shear stress and disruptive conditions that inhibits aggregate formation. These findings emphasize the importance of carefully managing mixing regimes, especially when attempting to reactivate ammonia-tolerant syntrophic propionate degraders in biogas systems experiencing rapid propionate accumulation under high-ammonia conditions.
期刊介绍:
Biotechnology for Biofuels is an open access peer-reviewed journal featuring high-quality studies describing technological and operational advances in the production of biofuels, chemicals and other bioproducts. The journal emphasizes understanding and advancing the application of biotechnology and synergistic operations to improve plants and biological conversion systems for the biological production of these products from biomass, intermediates derived from biomass, or CO2, as well as upstream or downstream operations that are integral to biological conversion of biomass.
Biotechnology for Biofuels focuses on the following areas:
• Development of terrestrial plant feedstocks
• Development of algal feedstocks
• Biomass pretreatment, fractionation and extraction for biological conversion
• Enzyme engineering, production and analysis
• Bacterial genetics, physiology and metabolic engineering
• Fungal/yeast genetics, physiology and metabolic engineering
• Fermentation, biocatalytic conversion and reaction dynamics
• Biological production of chemicals and bioproducts from biomass
• Anaerobic digestion, biohydrogen and bioelectricity
• Bioprocess integration, techno-economic analysis, modelling and policy
• Life cycle assessment and environmental impact analysis